When people start looking into a MAT program in Denver, they usually bring more than one question. They want help with cravings, relapse risk, and stability, but they do not want treatment to feel like a substitute for real recovery.
At CMAR, Michael Damioli, COO and Chief Clinical Officer, explains that medication-assisted treatment works best inside a broader outpatient structure, not as a stand-alone answer.
Why MAT Gets Misunderstood
A lot of hesitation around medication-assisted treatment in Colorado starts with stigma. That view also fits broader guidance from SAMHSA. Damioli addresses that concern by explaining “the difference between substance abuse and substance dependency.”
- The distinction between dependence and addiction is made clearer through a comparison: “A diabetic is dependent on insulin, but that doesn’t mean that they’re addicted to it.”
- This framing is important because the word “dependence” often leads people to incorrectly assume that treatment creates a new problem.
- Damioli explains the practical goal of treatment is to move someone “from a drug that we’re addicted to, something that’s causing us issues with our family and issues with our lives, to something that we are dependent on that’s helping us be more functional with our lives.”
The focus is not on whether medication sounds uncomfortable in theory. The focus is on whether treatment helps a person become safer, more stable, and more able to function. CMAR approaches MAT inside a broader outpatient detox model where the goal is stability, not substitution.

What Recovery-Oriented MAT Includes At CMAR
CMAR does not present MAT as a prescription-only track. Damioli keeps returning to a core principle when describing treatment. He says, “The core of our treatment model is around structure, accountability, and support.”
That structure is what makes recovery-oriented MAT different from medication without follow-through. It also places MAT inside a larger outpatient addiction treatment Colorado model rather than treating it like a separate service.
At CMAR, that coordinated plan can include:
- Addiction medicine
- Psychiatry
- Individual therapy
- Group therapy
- Medication management in recovery
- Case management
- Peer support and alumni connection
- Continued care planning
This is where the model becomes more complete. Patients are not just checking in for medications and leaving. They are moving through a connected outpatient recovery program that keeps medical and clinical support in the same conversation.
Damioli describes weekly treatment in concrete terms. He says, “The group is three hours long. It’s a combination of some psychoeducation, so learning something about addiction recovery or learning something about mental health, as well as processing.”
That matters because recovery-oriented MAT includes more than symptom control. It includes education, emotional work, peer connection, and enough structure to help people keep showing up.
Why Therapy Still Matters When Medication Helps
One of the biggest misconceptions around a MAT program in Denver is the idea that once cravings improve, the hardest part is over. Damioli makes it clear that symptom relief is only one piece of recovery.
That is why therapy with MAT matters so much. Damioli explains that substances often become a short-term coping strategy that people overuse, even though they do not work as a healthy long-term coping skill. It also helps readers understand how outpatient detox works as the start of a longer process, not the whole process.
In practice, that means treatment still has to address
- Coping skills
- Emotional regulation
- Interpersonal conflict
- Trauma and unresolved stress
- Private issues that may not fit a group setting
Medication can reduce cravings or withdrawal pressure, but counseling helps people build the skills they need for daily life. That is one reason CMAR’s approach fits the individualized model described by ASAM.
How CMAR Monitors Progress Without Making It Feel Punitive
Damioli is especially direct on this point because he knows many patients hear the word “accountability” and think of punishment. He does not dismiss that reaction, but he reframes it.
He says, “People, when they have to provide a drug test, it just brings up feelings of the correctional system of punishment, and that’s not at all the goal.”
Then he explains why monitoring still matters. He says, “Drug testing is really the only definitive medical test that we have to know whether or not our treatment is working for somebody.”
That changes the tone of accountability. CMAR uses monitoring to guide care, improve honesty, and protect safety, not to shame patients for struggling.
In practice, supportive monitoring can include:
- Drug or breath testing when clinically indicated
- Attendance follow-up
- Medication check-ins
- Case manager outreach
- Schedule adjustments when barriers show up
That kind of structure matters even more in early recovery, when people are still trying to build stability around work, family, and triggers. It also matters for patients receiving medication support through a Suboxone program, where follow-through and honesty help the team adjust care effectively.
Why People Struggle Early In Outpatient Care
The first weeks of treatment can feel shaky, even when someone truly wants recovery. Damioli describes early struggle as something clinicians should expect and respond to, not treat as proof that someone does not care.
Common problems can include
- Cravings that still feel intense
- Emotional discomfort after reducing or stopping substances
- Work and family stress
- Transportation or schedule problems
- Shame after a lapse
- Trouble staying organized enough to follow the plan
Damioli says the first response is to look for barriers the team can actually help remove. He explains, “If there are barriers to accessing care that we can help that person remove, we’ll do that.”
That can mean practical changes like flexible scheduling, make-up options, more outreach, or more help from case management. For some patients, it can also mean stepping up care after a rough start in outpatient treatment.
Medical stability matters here, too. Some people enter care after an at-home drug detox, while others need closer monitoring because withdrawal risk changes the treatment picture. That is especially true for alcohol, where the stages of alcohol withdrawal timeline can help explain why safety has to stay part of the plan.
Why Combining Medical And Clinical Support Often Works Better
Damioli is direct about the value of integrated addiction treatment. He says, “Research shows and our experience shows that doing both at the same time increases our odds.”
He is talking about medication plus counseling, but the same logic applies to the rest of the model, too. The more coordinated support someone has, the more likely they are to keep moving forward when recovery feels difficult.
He also warns against measuring progress too narrowly. Abstinence matters, but it is not the only outcome that counts.
The broader signs of progress can include:
- Improved relationships
- Better work consistency
- Stronger emotional regulation
- Better physical health
- More community engagement
- More follow-through in treatment
That broader view aligns with how NIDA describes recovery. Recovery is not only about reducing use. It is also about building a life that feels more stable, more manageable, and more connected.

What Recovery-Oriented MAT Really Means
At CMAR, recovery-oriented MAT means medication supports the recovery process without trying to replace the recovery process. Damioli’s language stays grounded in outcomes that people can actually feel: more stability, better functioning, more support, and a stronger chance of sustained change over time.
Medication matters, but so do therapy, psychiatry, case management, peer support, and enough time in treatment for new habits to take hold. That is the clearest way to understand whether MAT is right for you. It is not about swapping one problem for another. It is about using coordinated outpatient care to help someone function, participate, and heal in a way that lasts.